Practice guide How to handle purchase of own shares

Transcription

Practice guide How to handle purchase of own shares
Practice guide
How to handle
purchase of own shares
SPEED READ A company purchase of own shares is a
useful way of exiting shareholders from the company
and is preferable in many instances to a new holding
company as there is no increase in the number of
companies. However, if CGT treatment is expected the
adviser should methodically work through all the tests
and consider the pitfalls to ensure that there are no
nasty surprises.
Paula Tallon is Managing Director of Gabelle
LLP. Gabelle provides independent tax support for
accountants and other professionals. Paula’s areas
of expertise include company reorganisations and
reconstructions and other tax issues facing owner
managed businesses. Email: paula.tallon@gabelletax.
com; tel: 020 7182 4710.
A
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16
company purchase of own shares (POS)
can be a useful planning tool for an ownermanaged company. It can be used to
facilitate the exit of a shareholder or to carry out a
management buyout; the latter can be particularly
efficient if combined with an approved share scheme
such as Enterprise Management Incentives (EMI).
Take the situation where there is a successful
private company owned by a husband and wife.
They are both in their late fifties and are thinking
about an exit strategy. There are three employees
who they believe would be capable of taking the
business forward. The directors could put an EMI
plan in place with the intention that each of these
employees get, say 10% of the shares in the company.
The employees would pay whatever market value is
agreed with HMRC. When the options are exercised
the husband and wife would now have 70% of the
company and the management could carry out a
management buyout (MBO) by using a POS, subject
to the company having sufficient reserves. The
benefits are:
the repurchase is in effect funded out of future
profits;
the management do not have to personally
borrow funds to acquire the shares;
the existing shareholders do not lock more
money into the base cost of their shares; and
the company can usually get a corporation tax
deduction for interest on borrowings to fund the
repurchase.
Income treatment
Generally a POS is treated as a distribution, as
defined in CTA 2010 s 1000(1)B:
‘Any … distribution out of assets of the company in
respect of shares in the company except however much
(if any) of the distribution:
!(a)
represents repayment of capital on the
shares, or
!(b)
is (when it is made) equal in amount or
value to any new consideration received by the
company for the distribution.
For the purposes of this paragraph it does not
matter whether the distribution is in cash or not.’
However this does not override the fact that there
is a disposal for CGT purposes. So there are two
parts to the disposal for an individual shareholder.
First, there is a capital gains transaction in respect
of the shares, the proceeds being the total amount
of the consideration received from the company less
any amount that is subject to income tax (TCGA
1992 s 37), which will usually be equal to the capital
subscribed for the shares including any share
premium attaching to the shares. Second, there is a
distribution in respect of any excess which will be
taxed as dividend income under ITTOIA 2005 s 383.
See Example 1.
Capital treatment
The basic treatment above is set aside where the POS
is carried out by an unquoted trading company and
one of the following conditions is met:
Condition A: that the POS is made wholly or
mainly for the purposes of benefiting a trade
carried on by the company or any of its 75%
subsidiaries and that the POS does not form part
of a scheme or arrangement the main purpose or
one of the main purposes of which is to enable
the vendor to participate in the profits of the
company without receiving a dividend or the
avoidance of tax and the conditions as set out in
CTA 2010 ss 1034–1043 are satisfied. HMRC’s
SP2/82 gives examples of the trade benefit test.
Condition B: that the whole or substantially the
whole of the payment is applied in discharging
a liability for inheritance tax and it is so applied
within two years following the death.
The conditions in CTA 2010 ss 1034–1043 are:
Residence: the vendor must be resident and
ordinarily resident in the tax year in which the
repurchase is made. This test is largely irrelevant
now that there is no advance corporation tax (ACT)
on dividends.
Period of ownership: the shares must have been
owned by the vendor throughout the five years
ending with the disposal. Where the shares were
acquired by the vendor at different times they are
treated as being disposed of on a first in first out
(FIFO) basis.
If at any time during the five-year period the
shares were transferred between spouses or civil
partners and they were living together at the date of
transfer, the periods of ownership of both spouses
or civil partners are aggregated. Where the vendor
has acquired the shares under will or intestacy the
period of ownership is aggregated with the deceased
or personal representatives and the required period is
reduced from five years to three years.
Reduction of interest as a shareholder: where
shares are held by the vendor after the POS his
interest must be substantially reduced. Substantially
reduced is a reduction of more than 25%. See
Example 2.
Practical tip
Where there are more than two shareholders the
process of calculating the correct number of shares
www.taxjournal.com ~ 22 July 2011
to repurchase is very often done by trial and error
which can be tedious. Practitioners can use the
formula below to calculate the minimum number
of shares to repurchase so the substantial reduction
test is met. (The answer should always be rounded
up!)
SxC
4C – 3S
where
S = the shareholding of the vendor before the
repurchase; and
C = the issued share capital before the repurchase.
In Example 2 the formula would have given a
minimum of 119 shares to repurchase.
350 x 1,000 = 118.64
4,000-1,050
Entitlement to profits: the vendor’s entitlement
to profits must also be substantially reduced. The
purpose of this test is to prevent a shareholder
selling his shares back to the company and
continuing to benefit from a disproportionate
amount of profits. It is often assumed that once the
nominal value test above is met then this test is also
met. This test can be a trap for the unwary.
In applying the test the profits are increased
by £100 and if any person is entitled to periodic
distributions the profits are also increased by that
amount. See Example 3.
Group conditions: if the company is part of a
group the substantial reduction test must be met in
connection with the group as a whole. A group in
these circumstances is defined as a 75% group.
Connection: following the POS the vendor cannot
be connected with the company. Connected for
these purposes is an entitlement to more than 30%
of the issued ordinary share capital of the company;
the loan capital and the issued share capital of the
company; or the voting power of the company.
In considering this test the nominal value of the
shares and loan capital is used. This means that
if a company has issued share capital of 10,000 £1
ordinary shares, and a shareholder has 1,000 shares
and has also made a loan to the company of £20,000,
his total interest in the company amounts to 70%
of the combined loan capital and issued share
capital of the company (21,000/30,000). If the loan
cannot be repaid this situation could be dealt with
by issuing further share capital so as to swamp the
loan capital. This of course depends on the company
either having sufficient reserves to create further
share capital, or on the shareholders being willing
to inject some further funds into the company by
way of a share subscription. In the above example,
the company would have to issue a further 40,000
£1 ordinary shares, so that the total share capital is
£50,000 and the loan capital is £20,000.
CGT treatment is mandatory where the conditions
are met. If CGT treatment is not required the
transaction should be structured to ensure that
22 July 2011 ~ www.taxjournal.com
Example 1: income tax treatment
Mike acquired 10,000 £1 shares in Chalfont Ltd in 2000 for £10 per share.
In July 2011 the company repurchases 1,000 shares from Mike for £150 per
share so he receives £150,000. The tax treatment is as follows:
– Income tax: Distribution £140,000 ((£150,000 less £10,000)
– Capital gains: Proceeds £10,000 less cost £10,000. Net gain £0
Suppose Mike had acquired the shares second hand for £10 per share
and the original shareholder had only subscribed £1 per share the tax
consequences would be different.
– Income tax: Distribution £149,000 ((£150,000 less £1,000)
– Capital gains: Proceeds £1,000 less cost £10,000. Net loss £9,000
Although this loss has arisen on a connected party transaction this will
not be treated as a clogged loss for Mike as there has not been a disposal
and an acquisition. The company has cancelled the shares.
Example 2: capital treatment
Seer Ltd has 1,000 £1 ordinary shares in issue and the shareholders are:
Jen
Sue
Nick
Tom
200 £1 ordinary shares
450 £1 ordinary shares
150 £1 ordinary shares
200 £1 ordinary shares
Nick and Jen are married. The company purchases Jen’s shares leaving
800 shares in issue. As Jen and Nick are associates their shareholdings
must be looked at together for the purposes of this test. Jen’s interest
before the POS is 35% (350/1000) and her interest after the POS is 18.75%
(150/800). Jen's shareholding is less than 75% of her prior interest so the
test has been satisfied.
Example 3: entitlement to profits
Jordan Ltd has 100,000 ordinary £1 shares and 5,000 10% preference
shares in issue. These shares are held as follows: John has 20,000
£1 ordinary shares and 5,000 preference shares; Fred has 50,000 £1
ordinary shares; and Ken has 30,000 £1 ordinary shares. Whether this
test is met depends on the price of the repurchased shares and the level
of distributable profits. The intention is for Jordan Ltd to acquire 9,000
shares from John for £15,000. If the distributable profits were £20,000
before the purchase the profits for the purposes of the test would be:
£
Distributable profits
Statutory addition
Preference dividend
20,000
100
500
£20,600
John’s entitlement prior to the purchase is:
Preference dividend
20% of balance of £20,100
£
500
4,020
£4,520
This is 21.94% of the total.
After the purchase the profits available for distribution are £5,100,
John’s entitlement is:
Preference dividend
12.09% of balance of £5,100
£
500
617
£1,117
This is 19.95% of the total which does not represent a substantial
reduction so this test is failed.
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Seven potential traps to avoid
1 The assumption that the vendor wants CGT treatment. Always do
the maths. It is more tax efficient for a basic rate taxpayer to have the
proceeds taxed as a distribution. Also the vendor may have income
tax losses to relieve the tax.
2 Meeting the substantial reduction test and not meeting the
connection test or vice versa.
3 Loss of entrepreneurs’ relief where the director resigns first.
Resignation should always be after the repurchase.
4 Not having a benefit to the trade; this is not the same as a good
commercial reason.
5 Repurchasing the shares in instalments but not getting the sequence
of events correct.
6 Other tax issues may arise if the purchase price does not reflect
market value, for example employment related securities.
7 Do not forget stamp duty at ½%.
the conditions are not met. This could include
repurchasing the shares in tranches or presenting
a repurchase which has as its main purpose the
provision of funds to the shareholder.
Relevant cases
In Moody v Tyler ([2000] STC 296) it was found
that the purchase was simply a means to facilitate
the repayment of a loan made by the company to
the individual so CGT treatment was denied. In
Allum and Another v Marsh ([2005] STC(SCD) 191)
a husband and wife owned almost all the shares in
a trading company, with their son having a very
small minority interest. The company’s premises
had development potential. The main shareholders
wished to retire from the business and saw the
sale of the property as a means of providing funds
for their retirement, but wanted their son to carry
on the trade. The property was sold without the
company securing alternative premises and the
company purchased all the shares held by the main
shareholders, leaving the son as sole shareholder.
The company only managed to secure limited
access to premises which were shared with another
company and the company’s trade reduced
substantially. It was found that these transactions
had not benefited the trade in any way so the
disposal by the shareholders could not be treated as
capital.
Clearance and returns
Advance clearance can be obtained in respect of
the transaction. As regards the various conditions
set out in ss 1034–1043 it will be a matter of
fact whether these tests are met. However the
practitioner and the clients may want assurances
that the benefit to the trade test is met. Following
the POS the company must make a return to HMRC
within 60 days giving details of the payment.
■
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18
www.taxjournal.com ~ 22 July 2011